Arbeit als Teil einer Energieutopie
Sigrid Stagl (WU Wien)
Energiegespräche - Energieutopie oder Energiedystopie? 15. September 2015 um 18.30 Uhr
Festsaal des Technischen Museums Wien
Folgende Fragen sollen in den kommenden Energiegesprächen diskutiert werden:
• Wie wird bzw. wie soll die Energiezukunft aussehen? • Wie wird die Bereitstellung aussehen, wie die Verteilung? • Wer wird sich Energie leisten können? Wer sind die Verlierer?
Übersicht
• Energieeffizienz • Wirtschaften innerhalb von biophysischen Grenzen • Nachhaltiges Handeln von Individuen • Sozialen Infrastrukturen, die nachhaltiges Handeln unterstützen • Umdenken bedeutender sozialer Institutionen, zB Arbeit • Energieutopien brauchen Berücksichtigung des sozial-ökologischen
Nexus
Energieeffizienz • Steigerung der Energieeffizienz wird oft als Schlüsselfaktor zur
Erreichung von langfristigen Energie- und Klimazielen gesehen • Energieeffizienz wird vielfach als Allheilmittel betrachtet, um energie-
und umweltpolitische Ziele (Versorgungssicherheit, Klimaschutz etc.) kostengünstig zu erreichen
• Hoffnung, dass eine energieeffiziente Wissensgesellschaft viel weniger Energie verbraucht; Reduktion der Energieintensität
• Kann eine Effizienzrevolution gelingen?
Kann eine Effizienzrevolution gelingen? Ausmaß der Entkoppelung nötig bis 2050
• Assume 0.7%/year population growth and 1.4%/year per capita GDP growth • For global energy and process CO2 emissions to fall by 50% to 85% by 2050,
carbon emission per unit of GDP must fall by 82% to 94% • Implies cut of 3.8% to 6.4%/year
• cf -1.3%/year 1970-2000 and +0.3%/year since 2000 • If only -1.3%/year, emissions increase by 55%
• Even if emissions and population stabilised, carbon intensity in 2050 must be less than 2% of 2000 levels
• Is this plausible?
Source: Sorrell 2009
Source: Prosperity without growth, Tim Jackson (London, Earthscan 2009)
Scenarios carbon intensity
Kann eine Effizienzrevolution gelingen?
Möglich durch • Systeminnovationen • Tipping points
Schwierig, wegen • direkten und indirekten Reboundeffekten • sozial-ökologischem Nexus
timescale
(years)
0 5 10 15 20 25
improvement in environmental
performance
(factor)
10
5
2
incremental optimisation
radical partial system redesign
transformative new system
eg:
improved varieties
CCGT
nuclear / carbon capture
smart grid / micro-renewables
Socio-Technical Transition
Seite 8
The Rebound Effect: An Assessment of the Evidence for Economy-wide Energy Savings from Improved Energy Efficiency
rebound study by Steve Sorrell for the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) from 2005-2007
quantifying rebound is challenging; not only direct, but also indirect effects (knock-on changes throughout the economy) and efficiency improvements rarely occur on their own
systematic review of the evidence
Rebound effects are significant and will limit the potential for decoupling energy consumption from economic growth
“It is wholly a confusion of ideas to suppose that the economical use of fuel is equivalent to a diminished consumption. The very contrary is the truth….Every improvement of the engine, when effected, does but accelerate anew the consumption of coal”
W.S. Jevons, The Coal Question, 1865
Jevons’ Paradox holds in important cases
Improved efficiency of steam engines
Lower cost steam power
Greater use of steam engines
Coal-mining
Steel-making
Lower cost steel
Lower cost rail transport
Lower cost coal
Rebound effects - consumers
Lower running
costs
Driver further or more often (or in a larger
vehicle)
Lower petrol bills
Holiday in
Spain
Less energy
More energy
More energy
Direct
Indirect
Embodied energy
Source: Sorrell 2007
Reinforcement of rebound effects
Source: Sorrell 2007
Rebound effects - producers
Lower cost steel
More steel production
Lower cost cars
More car
travel
Less energy
More energy
More energy
Direct
Indirect
Embodied energy
Source: Sorrell 2007
Economy-wide rebound effect
Direct rebound effect
Counterfactual energy savings
Indirect rebound effect Economy-wide
rebound effect
Actual energy savings
Source: Sorrell 2007
Rebound effects matter… • Direct: 30% or less for car travel and space heating/cooling.
Smaller for most other household energy services • But: Only limited time periods studied. Marginal consumers ignored. Only
subset of variables measured. Few studies of producers and/or households in developing countries.
• Economy-wide: Diverse modelling studies suggest 30% to >100% • But: Depends on nature and location of energy efficiency improvement.
Sensitive to assumptions. Assumes only ‘pure’ energy efficiency improvements
• Variable, significant and probably larger than current studies suggest
Source: Sorrell 2007
…but their magnitude is an empirical question
100%
0%
50%
Rebound effect (%)
Type and location of energy efficiency improvement
Non-energy intensive sectors and households
Non-core technologies
‘Dedicated’ energy efficient technologies
Developed countries
Energy intensive sectors and energy producers
Core process technologies
‘Win-win’ technologies
‘General-purpose’ technologies
Developing countries
Source: Sorrell 2007
Empirische Schätzung von Rebound Effekten
18
Source: Steffen et al. 2015
Earth system boundaries and human interference
Victor P 2008. Managing without Growth – Slower by Design not Desaster, Edward Elgar
Victor P 2008. Managing without Growth – Slower by Design not Desaster, Edward Elgar
Victor P 2008. Managing without Growth – Slower by Design not Desaster, Edward Elgar
Source: Goodwin 2003
Economics in Context
Warum ökologisch korrekter Konsum die Umwelt nicht retten kann
• Armin Grünwald: • Sie trennen Ihren Müll, kaufen Gemüse aus der Region und fahren einen Kleinwagen. Aber
was, wenn dieses Handeln der Umwelt wenig oder gar nichts nützt? • Mehr und mehr wird die Verantwortung für eine nachhaltige Entwicklung in den privaten
Bereich abgeschoben – das kann im besten Fall wenig zielführend und im schlimmsten sogar kontraproduktiv sein.
• Denn Nachhaltigkeit ist eine Aufgabe der politischen Systeme. • Das heißt nicht, dass der einzelne Mensch in diesem Geschehen keinen Platz hat. • Seine Aufgabe ist es aber, politisch für die Nachhaltigkeit einzutreten – jenseits von
Stromsparen und ökologisch korrektem Konsum.
• Gordon Walker: Beyond individual responsibility. In: Social practices, intervention and sustainability
• Wir brauchen soziale Infrastrukturen, die nachhaltiges Handeln unterstützen
Social-ecological nexus
• ”All ecological projects (and arguments) are simultaneously political-economic projects (and arguments) and vice versa. Ecological projects are never socially neutral any more than socio-political arguments are ecologically neutral” (Harvey 1993).
• Bookchin: “The way human beings deal with each other as social beings is crucial to adressing the ecological crisis” (Bookchin 1993).
• Social ecology (Bookchin, Ostrom, Boyce): environmental challenges are truly social problems that arise largely because of income and power inequality and can find their true resolution by putting forward justice principles and building good institutions.
• Eloi Laurent - Building the “social-ecological state”
Some empirical observations
Declining labour shares – globally and in largest economies
Source: Karabarbounis, Neiman 2013
Source: Alvaredo, F., A. B. Atkinson, T. Piketty and E. Saez (2013). "The Top 1 Percent in International and Historical Perspective." Journal of Economic Perspectives 27(3): 3-20.
Source: Alvaredo, F., A. B. Atkinson, T. Piketty and E. Saez (2013). "The Top 1 Percent in International and Historical Perspective." Journal of Economic Perspectives 27(3): 3-20.
Annual working hours since 1870
1870 1920 1950 2000 US 2600 2300 2000 1900 UK 2700 2400 2100 1700 France 3100 2500 2100 1500 Germany 3200 2600 2100 1500
Source: Koch 2015, based upon Huberman, figures rounded
Average annual hours actually worked in selected countries and GDP
2013 2013/2000
Hours Rank 1 Hours Rank 1 Abs.Diff. Rank 1 Euro at PPS % p.a.
Netherlands 1435 17 1380 17 -55 6 34.868 1.9Germany 1471 15 1388 16 -83 11 32.552 2.7Denmark 1468 16 1411 15 -57 7 33.070 2.0France 1535 14 1489 14 -46 4 28.359 1.8Switzerland 1674 12 1585 13 -89 13 43.376 2.9Sweden 1642 13 1607 12 -35 3 33.713 2.2Austria 1842 7 1623 11 -219 17 34.051 2.2Spain 1731 10 1665 10 -66 8 25.371 2.3UK 1700 11 1669 9 -31 2 28.896 1.5Japan 1821 9 1735 8 -86 12 27.362 1.5Italy 1861 6 1752 7 -109 16 26.460 1.0USA 1836 8 1788 6 -48 5 40.010 1.8Turkey 1937 5 1832 5 -105 15 14.030 4.4Poland 1988 3 1918 4 -70 9 17.894 5.2Russia 1982 4 1980 3 -2 1Greece 2130 2 2037 2 -93 14 19.320 1.2Mexico 2311 1 2237 1 -74 10 12.729 3.0
EU (11 countries) 1709 10 1631 11 -79 9 28.596 2.2
2000 2013 2013-2000
GDP/capitaHours worked
1 Highest hours worked ranked 1.
Source: OECD, Eurostat.
Sour
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and
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ude
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ain
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So
urce
: Zw
ickl
, Diss
lbac
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Stag
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rthd
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g)
Average hours worked and inequality in hours worked in the EU
Source: Own calculations using EU SILC 2010. The Ginis were calculated using Stata’s ineqdeco package. Following Salverda and Checci (2015) we restricted the sample to the population in the relevant working age (20-64 years old) and to the labor force (employed and unemployed by self-definition). Yearly hours worked were computed by multiplying the reported number of weekly hours worked (PL060 – numbers of hours usually worked per week in main job) with the months spent in the labor market (PL073-74-74-76-80 – number of months spent at full-time/part-time work as employee/self-employed/unemployed). Source: Zwickl, Disslbacher, Stagl (forthdoming)
Volunteering in at least one association (except for trade unions and political parties), 1999/2000, according to the European Values Study
Source: European Values Study, 1999/2000, as reported by Bogdan & Mălina Voicu in 2003.
The different faces of volunteering
In search of cases of sustainable work
Are there policies in place around Europe that support a socio-ecological transformation of work?
FP7 project: www4Europe • Austria (Christian Hödl) • Denmark (Heidi Leonhardt) • Greece (Anran Luo) • Netherlands (Desirée Bernhardt) • Spain (Lucía Baratech) • Sweden (Ernest Aigner) • UK (Ben Curnow)
Denmark – a role model for environmental and labour policy? (Heidi Leonhardt)
Active labour market policies
Flexicurity
Sweden – a role model for environmental and labour policy? (Ernest Aigner)
Case studies Vorsorgendes Wirtschaften
• Bürgschaftsbank • Environment Centre Türnich • Landwerkstätten (Handicraft Shops) • Haus der Eigenarbeit • Forest management (Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg'sche Waldbesitz) • Kempodium (explore and use cultural, economic and social resources
of the region) Source: Biesecker, A., M. Mathes and S. Schön, Eds. (2000). Vorsorgendes Wirtschaften - Auf dem Weg zu einer Ökonomie des Guten Lebens, Usp-Publishing.
Actors of labour and environmental policies
• Trafo-Labour project funded by the Austrian Climate Fund (KLIEN, ACRP)
• Which role have unions and other workers‘ representatives played in environmental policy in Austria?
• With which policies could they address the social-ecological nexus constructively?
• PI: U Brand (Univ of Vienna) • WU team: M Soder, H Theine and S Stagl
Worksharing
• length of the work day was already a central topic in Marx’ Capital • “three-hour shifts or a fifteen-hour week” were the logical outcome in
Keynes’ (1930) vision of saturated capitalism • In Europe’s post-war societies trade unions heavily advocated general
working time reductions • work-sharing programs were designed as short-term crisis measures • traditional policies to increase employment and equity have relied on
economic growth • negative economic and social consequences, such as an unequal
distribution of wages and reduced well-being due to un- and under-employment for some workers and burnout and stress for others
• even the most prominent studies that are often cited to argue against worksharing, can provide no credible evidence of negative employment effects
The consequences of unequal hours worked
• longer working hours of some will reduce the employment opportunities of others
• if longer working hours are viewed as a positional externality, public policy aimed at reducing this externality could be welfare-enhancing
• longer working hours have also been associated with adverse health effects
• mismatch between the actual and preferred hours has been found to reduce life satisfaction, and self-perceived health
• unequal working hours also translate into unequal hourly wages. • adverse effects of an unequal distribution of paid employment on gender
equality in the division of household tasks
Has work-sharing worked? Empirical evidence from history
• Work-Sharing during the Great Depression in the U.S. • Work-Sharing in the 1980s-2000s • Work-Sharing in the Great Recession
But wait – what should be aiming for?
• Energy efficiency? • making do with less (although there is a matter of getting rid of the
consumer excess that we don't actually want when we think about it)? • worksharing? • what we really really want, what helps us to be whole people and live
vibrantly and all that other eudaimonic stuff?
Biesecker and Hofmeister (2010): (Re)productivity
• interconnectedness of human and natural ecosystems • work as „any mediation process between humans and their
environment that generates a result needed by the individual to reproduce her life“
Zukunftsfähiges Arbeiten
• Erwerbsarbeit • Sorgearbeit • Freiwillige Arbeit an der Gesellschaft (Bürgerschaft; Engagement) • Eigenarbeit
“We need a new understanding of work, that integrates the multitude of types of labour that happen outside markets instead of focusing solely on paid work. Moreover, this ‘ensemble’ of work needs to be without hierarchy and ecologically sound. This new understanding of work is then the foundation for social redistribution and a reevaluation of work that includes everyone and overcomes categorizations and degradations based on gender” (Biesecker 2012:1).
Sozial-ökologischer Nexus
• Paradox: je untragbarer Umweltprobleme werden, desto weniger Toleranz herrscht für Sorgen um die Umwelt
• John Maynard Keynes in anderem Kontext: “party of catastrophe” – untragbare Angst verbreiten ohne Lösungen anzubieten, die für die Mehrheit von Bürger/inn/en umsetzbar sind.
• Umweltprobleme sind soziale Probleme, die sich großteils aufgrund von Einkommen und Ungleichheit ergeben.
Vielen Dank für Ihre Aufmerksamkeit! Ich freue mich auf Ihre Kommentare und Fragen. Univ. Prof. Dr Sigrid Stagl WU – Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien Department Sozioökonomie Institute for Ecological Economics Welthandelsplatz 1 / D4, 1020 Wien [email protected]
Einladung: Eröffnung des Forschungsinstituts Economics of Inequality (Freitag, 18. September, 14-17 Uhr im Festsaal 2 der WU Wien) Einladung: Inaugural Event of the Institute for Ecological Economics (Dienstag, 13. Oktober, 9-17 Uhr im Clubraum der WU Wien) Zur Info: WU Master of Science in Socio-Ecological Economics & Policy (SEEP)
mailto:[email protected]
Arbeit als Teil einer EnergieutopieFolgende Fragen sollen in den kommenden Energiegesprächen diskutiert werden:ÜbersichtEnergieeffizienzKann eine Effizienzrevolution gelingen?�Ausmaß der Entkoppelung nötig bis 2050Scenarios carbon intensityKann eine Effizienzrevolution gelingen?Socio-Technical TransitionThe Rebound Effect: An Assessment of the Evidence for Economy-wide Energy Savings from Improved Energy EfficiencySlide Number 10Jevons’ Paradox holds in important casesRebound effects - consumersReinforcement of rebound effectsRebound effects - producersEconomy-wide rebound effectRebound effects matter……but their magnitude is an empirical questionEmpirische Schätzung von Rebound EffektenEarth system boundaries �and human interferenceSlide Number 20Slide Number 21Slide Number 22Slide Number 23Warum ökologisch korrekter Konsum die Umwelt nicht retten kannSocial-ecological nexusSome empirical observationsSlide Number 27Slide Number 28Slide Number 29Slide Number 30Annual working hours since 1870Average annual hours actually worked in selected countries and GDPSlide Number 33Average hours worked and inequality in hours worked in the EUVolunteering in at least one association (except for trade unions and political parties), 1999/2000, according to the European Values StudyThe different faces of volunteeringIn search of cases of sustainable workAre there policies in place around Europe that support a socio-ecological transformation of work?Denmark – a role model for environmental and labour policy? (Heidi Leonhardt)Sweden – a role model for environmental and labour policy? (Ernest Aigner)Case studies Vorsorgendes WirtschaftenActors of labour and environmental policiesWorksharingThe consequences of unequal hours workedHas work-sharing worked? Empirical evidence from historyBut wait – what should be aiming for?Biesecker and Hofmeister (2010): (Re)productivityZukunftsfähiges ArbeitenSozial-ökologischer NexusSlide Number 50Vielen Dank für Ihre Aufmerksamkeit!�Ich freue mich auf Ihre Kommentare und Fragen.��Univ. Prof. Dr Sigrid Stagl�WU – Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien�Department Sozioökonomie�Institute for Ecological Economics�Welthandelsplatz 1 / D4, 1020 Wien��[email protected] �